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Read the writing aloud sentence by sentence to naturally hear if each one expresses a complete thought and sounds finished. Identify the subject and verb in every sentence. A complete sentence must have both a subject and a verb and express a complete thought. Look for dependent words such as "which," "if," "such as," "because," "since," "who," and "that." Sentences starting with or containing these words are often fragments if they are not connected to an independent clause. Use grammar-checking tools available in word processing software or online to help flag potential fragments for review. rephrase this sentence in 5th-7th grade sentences and turn ll of them into a pragraph
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GPT-5 mini
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Read your writing out loud, one sentence at a time. Listen to see if each sentence sounds finished and gives a complete idea. Find the subject and the verb in every sentence. A complete sentence needs a subject, a verb, and a whole idea. Watch for words like which, if, such as, because, since, who, and that. Sentences that start with or use those words can be fragments if they are not joined to a complete sentence. Use the grammar checker in your word program or an online tool to help find possible fragments.
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